Apparent randomness is the result of unsophisticated measuring tools, though on the quantum level we do see the necessity of uncertainty, though it is not the same as randomness.
Lightning fought the chaos so you and the human race could live.
Quote from: oss on May 25, 2015, 12:39:18 PMLightning fought the chaos so you and the human race could live.and cried
Quote from: True Turquoise on May 25, 2015, 12:51:46 PMQuote from: oss on May 25, 2015, 12:39:18 PMLightning fought the chaos so you and the human race could live.and criedWe dont...talk about that...
Still, if existence just so happens to be infinite, then what could ever conceive or process enough information to predict the future of something of that scale?
nopehard determinist hereanything can be predicted with enough info
Why? How did you come to that conclusion?
Do you believe that your life, past present and future, has already been determined?
Do you have free will?
Quote from: adubato on May 25, 2015, 01:17:21 PMWhy? How did you come to that conclusion?logicnewton's laws of motionQuoteDo you believe that your life, past present and future, has already been determined?essentially, yesQuoteDo you have free will?nonot that i can tell
Sprott found a three-dimensional system with just five terms, that had only one nonlinear term, which exhibits chaos for certain parameter values.
memes aside, doesn't that make you want to kill yourself? What is there to live for if autonomy and time are illusions?
Quote from: DAS "كافر" B00T on May 25, 2015, 01:30:44 PMSprott found a three-dimensional system with just five terms, that had only one nonlinear term, which exhibits chaos for certain parameter values.What do you mean by exhibits chaos? how does it manifest in regards to the equation?
http://rationallyspeaking.blogspot.com.au/2011/12/handy-dandy-guide-for-skeptic-of.html?m=1Good read for hard determinists. I lean towards soft determinism myself.
Quote from: Pendulate on May 25, 2015, 05:57:20 PMhttp://rationallyspeaking.blogspot.com.au/2011/12/handy-dandy-guide-for-skeptic-of.html?m=1Good read for hard determinists. I lean towards soft determinism myself.Thank you, that was interesting, i just have an issue when he says "the “laws” of physics treat time as symmetrical, which means that the present and the future “fix” the past just in the same way in which the past “fixes” the present and the future. No particular area of the time axis has priority over the others." If he's trying to make a case for the existence of free will, why does he cite this claim? If things are symmetrically fixed, then isn't hard determinism further proven?
Quote from: adubato on May 25, 2015, 06:53:33 PMQuote from: Pendulate on May 25, 2015, 05:57:20 PMhttp://rationallyspeaking.blogspot.com.au/2011/12/handy-dandy-guide-for-skeptic-of.html?m=1Good read for hard determinists. I lean towards soft determinism myself.Thank you, that was interesting, i just have an issue when he says "the “laws” of physics treat time as symmetrical, which means that the present and the future “fix” the past just in the same way in which the past “fixes” the present and the future. No particular area of the time axis has priority over the others." If he's trying to make a case for the existence of free will, why does he cite this claim? If things are symmetrically fixed, then isn't hard determinism further proven?He's not making a case for free will. He doesn't believe it exists (or, to be foward, he accepts that it cannot exist). He's arguing against the hard causality of determinism, or that we should at least be agnostic about it.Bear in mind that a chaotic universe still wouldn't result in free will.
Well then why should we be agnostic about it when it's fixed from both ways? I don't understand how this symmetry "softens" a deterministic point of view, unless I am misunderstanding something.